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To judge from the various most
popular search lists that are showing up as the year draws to a close,
the average search user is a pubescent male, with an IQ that hovers in
the low 90’s, and who spends an unhealthy amount of time in his room. I
have said, on several occasions, that our search patterns are a
reflection of our society. If that’s true, our society’s intellect is
about as deep as the ring left by a Starbucks coffee cup.
When I saw the first list come in my email, I don’t know why I was
surprised. After all, Pamela Anderson holds the record as the most
searched for term for the past decade, and Britney Spears and Paris
Hilton are breathing down her neck. But come on; are we really as
shallow as our searches seem to indicate?
Lycos has just released their list for the past year. The top 10 terms
for 2005:
Paris Hilton Pamela Anderson Britney Spears Poker Dragonball Jennifer Lopez WWE Pokemon Playstation Hurricane Katrina
There we have it, the greatest depository of information every
assembled, instantly accessible to all who seek knowledge and
enlightenment, and Paris Hilton is the best we can do? Hurricane
Katrina, the worst natural disaster in US history, (although arguably,
Paris, Pam and Britney all qualify in this category) barely made the
list?
Maybe it’s just Lycos users that are scrapping the bottom of the online
barrel. So I checked out Google’s Zeitgeist and Yahoo Buzz.
Yahoo’s Buzz is at least a little more balanced on gender. The top 10?
Britney Spears 50 Cent Cartoon Network Mariah Carey Green Day Jessica Simpson Paris Hilton Eminem Ciara Lindsay Lohan
Still not a fertile recruitment bed for MENSA, I’m guessing.
Google doesn’t publish the overall top 10, instead breaking them up into
categories and top gainers. Perhaps this is their way of defending their
user’s intellectual reputation. But if the top news searches are any
indication, there are very few Google users following in Edward R.
Murrow’s footsteps. Topping the list was Janet Jackson, with such
compelling news stories as xbox 360, Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie, Michael
Jackson and yes, the omnipresent Ms Spears also making the list.
And Newton Minnow called commercial television a vast waste land!
But wait a minute. Yahoo Buzz lets you see what other cultures are
searching for. How does the US stack up against the world?
You’ll be happy to know the French are just as boorish, with the regular
suspects, Britney, Jennifer Lopez and Paris (the scantily clad
debutante, not the city) showing up on their list. Toss in Jessica Alba
for good measure. The Germans show a disturbing dichotomy in their
search habits, with half of the terms showing Teutonic practicality and
the other half being just plain kinky. On one hand you have “trip
planner”, “weather” and “cheap flights”, and on the other you have
“erotica” and “partner swapping”. Interestingly, the Germans don’t seem
as star struck as the rest of the world. The only celebrity to make the
list was Sarah Connor, a German pop star.
How about my fellow Canadians? Well, I wish I could report differently,
but our national stereotype seems rooted in fact. For 7 months out of
12, we’re searching for Hockey. |